What Do the Ticks Mean on WhatsApp? Grey, Double Grey and Blue Explained
On WhatsApp, one grey tick means sent, two grey ticks mean delivered, and two blue ticks mean read. Here's exactly what each check mark means, how it works in group chats, and why your ticks sometimes never turn blue.
WhatsApp's little check marks — the ticks next to every message you send — are a status system, and once you know how to read them you'll never wonder whether a message landed again. There are three states, plus some important quirks in group chats and privacy settings. Here's the complete guide.
The three tick states
- One grey tick — sent. Your message has left your phone and reached WhatsApp's servers, but it hasn't reached the recipient's device yet. If it's stuck on one tick for a while, their phone is probably off, offline, or out of signal.
- Two grey ticks — delivered. The message has arrived on the recipient's phone. It does not mean they've opened it — they may have seen a notification preview, but they haven't necessarily opened the chat.
- Two blue ticks — read. The recipient has actually opened the conversation and the message has been displayed on their screen. WhatsApp calls this a read receipt.
The distinction that trips everyone up is delivered vs read. Reading a message in the notification banner does not turn the ticks blue — only opening the chat itself does.
Why your ticks might never turn blue
If your messages sit on two grey ticks even though you're sure the person has seen them, the most common reason is that they've turned read receipts off. When read receipts are disabled, the sender only ever sees two grey ticks, even after the message is read. There's a catch built into the setting: if you turn off read receipts to read others' messages invisibly, you also lose the ability to see when your messages are read. It's mutual.
Other reasons ticks stay grey include the recipient genuinely not having opened the chat yet, or a connectivity problem on either end.
How ticks work in group chats
Group behavior is different and worth understanding:
- Two grey ticks appear when the message has been delivered to the group.
- Two blue ticks appear only when every member of the group has read the message — not when just one person opens it.
So a group message can sit on two grey ticks for a long time even if several people have read it, simply because one member hasn't. In a group, you can tap and hold your own message and choose "Info" to see exactly who has read and who has only received it. Note that turning off read receipts hides blue ticks in one-to-one chats but does not hide them in group chats the same way.
Does one grey tick mean you're blocked?
Not on its own. A single grey tick usually just means the message hasn't been delivered yet — the phone is off, offline, or out of range. Being blocked is one possible reason among several, and it tends to come with other signs (you can't see their last-seen or profile photo updates, and calls won't connect). Don't read too much into a single stubborn grey tick by itself.
How to read a message without turning the ticks blue
Some people want to read a message without the sender knowing. The two common approaches are to permanently disable read receipts in Settings, or to read a message in airplane mode: turn airplane mode on, open and read the message, then fully close WhatsApp before turning connectivity back on, so the read receipt isn't sent. The airplane-mode trick is fiddly and you have to remember to do it before connecting again. WhatsApp's own help center covers the official read-receipts setting if you'd rather just switch it off.
Want to mock up a WhatsApp chat?
If you're making a meme, a skit, or a design comp and need a believable WhatsApp screenshot — with the right grey and blue ticks, timestamps and a group chat — you can build one with our free fake WhatsApp chat generator. It runs in your browser with no watermark and nothing stored. As always, keep it for parody and jokes — never use a fabricated chat as fake evidence or to deceive someone.
The bottom line
One grey tick is sent, two grey ticks are delivered, and two blue ticks are read. In groups, blue only appears once everyone has read it, and if someone's ticks never go blue, they've most likely switched read receipts off. The system is simple once you know it — and far less mysterious than the speculation it tends to generate.



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